Every once in a while a bold new picture from the most unexpected corner of the world hits the international film scene baffling film critics and surpassing the audience’s wildest expectations. Such is the case with Ralph Ziman’s gritty crime thriller Jerusalema, set in post-apartheid South Africa. Clearly on par with the likes of contemporary classics City of God (2002), Tropa de Elite (2007) and the more recent Slumdog Millionaire (2008), Jerusalema tells the story of self-proclaimed gangster Lucky Kunene, his spectacular rise from poverty to power, and the illegal empire he built amid the Hillbrow slums of modern Johannesburg.
From its opening shots, Jerusalema – much like its mostly Brazilian genre predecessors – shocks the audience with its raw intensity, unflinching realism and de-aestheticized portrayal of social inequality. As if to intensify shock value and make the picture even more potent, the film is based on true events resulting in a unique cross between José Padilha’s cult classic Tropa de Elite and Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire’s more recent work Johnny Mad Dog (2008). However, while the rampant car theft, appalling living conditions, dysfunctional legal system and general state of corruption shown certainly paint South Africa in a less than favorable light, it is precisely the presence of these controversial elements that make the work a landmark achievement in South African and world cinema.
The plot roughly follows the life of Lucky Kunene (Rapulana Seiphemo), who starts out as an ambitious Soweto teenager looking for ways to fund his college education and eventually ends up behind bars on multiple homicide charges. As youngsters, Kunene and his best friend Zakes (Motlatsi Mahloko) struggle to earn their way out of the oppressive poverty that surrounds them. Seeing their legitimate efforts fail one after another, they reluctantly turn to illegal alternatives and begin performing “affirmative repossession” activities (stealing cars) for the local Russia-educated crime boss Nazareth (Jeffrey Sekele), a disillusioned ANC guerilla used to solving problems via the AK-47.
Although very profitable, their criminal involvements put the boys on a dangerous collision course with the local police and private security forces. After a robbery goes wrong one day, the pair are forced to flee to Johannesburg. Once there, the two start up a pirate taxi business, which soon falls apart when they are attacked by thugs from a rival “firm” and their taxi is stolen. Kunene thus returns to a life of crime, but this time around he goes for the bigger fish by repossessing dilapidated Hillbrow apartment blocks from their white owners through questionable practices that ultimately amount to a legalized form of extortion. As his fortune and fame grow, Kunene allows himself to be distracted by an affair and begins to lose control of his no-drugs policy for the apartment buildings, which puts him on a slippery slope and ultimately leads to his downfall.
With Jerusalema, director Ralph Ziman paints a devastating yet deeply human picture of an impoverished nation torn apart by organized crime and the specter of racial intolerance. However, the film is much more than a palpable crime thriller as it quite possibly represents an important turning point, a cultural revolution in South African cinema. The highly controversial nature of the work, its matter-of-fact approach to difficult subject matter and remarkable willingness to shed light on some of the less savory aspects of life in the new South Africa all signal a maturation of the country’s film industry and a significant evolution from earlier, less confrontational works such as Tsotsi (2005) and The Wooden Camera (2003).
Jerusalema (2008)
Director: Ralph Ziman
Starring: Rapulana Seiphemo (Lucky Kunene), Jeffrey Zekele (Nazareth)
Genre: Action | Crime | Drama
Runtime: 120 mins | Country: South Africa | Language: English
Agreed. The film is devastating and frightening. Never new there was such great talent in South Africa. Well done to all.
DIRECTOR Ralph Ziman’s vivid, action-packed South African gangster epic makes for exciting big screen entertainment. Highly commercial and hardly politically correct, but reeking with authenticity, the aptly and ironically titled “Jerusalema” offers cinema-goers the same sort of tough, high-energy thrills as crime epics like “Scarface”, “American Gangster” and “City of God”. Unlike “Tsotsi”, it’s not out win awards, or to preach about the struggle. It’s out to please crowds. Yet, while telling a strong, funny, gripping, well-acted story of a young gangster’s rise to power, it also manages to paint a devastating picture of how and why crime has spiraled out of control in the new South Africa. Telling its tale on a broad canvas, it begins in Soweto in the early 1990s, introducing the audience to two teenage boys, Lucky Kunene (Jafta Mamabolo) and his best friend Zakes (Motlatsi Mahloko). Lucky is an intelligent, ambitious youngster from a poor single parent home who is accepted into university. He doesn’t, however, get a bursary, so he tries to earn money through various legitimate schemes. None of which succeed. Eventually he and Zakes are sucked into crime though their relationship with Nazareth (a potent Jeffrey Sekele), an angry disaffected, former ANC guerilla. And soon they’re hijacking cars (“affirmative repossession”, says Nazareth). But, after a botched robbery and a near fatal encounter with the police, the lads must flee to the “jungles” of Hillbrow. Cut to five years later. Lucky and Zakes (now played by Rapulana Seiphemo and Ronnie Nyakale) are operating a pirate Taxi and scraping by. It’s a dangerous life and when armed rivals steal their taxi, Lucky decides to return to crime. “Jeruselema” might shock some middle-class viewers, but it is riveting fare and the crowd I saw it with clapped and cheered along with the action. The charismatic Seiphemo delivers a stunning performance – turning Lucky into a surprisingly sympathetic anti-hero, and he’s superbly supported by Nyakale, Sekele and a devilish Malusi Skenjana, who plays a slimy Nigerian drug dealer. Then there are the great action scenes and the powerful underlying themes. This vibrant, violent, colorful, authentic crime thriller, which pays homage to Michael Mann’s classic, “Heat” heralds a new dawn in South African film-making and is highly recommended to audiences looking for top notch entertainment.
LOVED THIS FILM! FANTASTIC CASTING!
If you thought Tsotsi was brilliant, Jerusalema will blow you away. It’s about determination and hope. I’ve never seen such an apt depiction of township life. Big -up 2 the producers for the angle they took. I loved the music and how they tied Jerusalema with the lead characters’ praying mother! A must see, for inspiration if nothing else!
Guys lets praise SA for producing such an magnificent movie in the international screens, u better start going to the cinemas to watch the awesome job did by our camera men, editors and directors etc. Big up Mzantsi Big up.